Ooh, yes please...
I think I know an extant php system that does a very similar thing if you want the source. I guarantee it is free range and gluten free...
I'm pretty sure the store is just a pass through, so it shouldn't be too much of a burden. It would all depend on the products that were promoted.
What does Knowledgebase mean in terms of this website/new website? The Wiki thing?
Will get it off to ya as soon as I can get by the actual office and hit the storage system. I took the secure storage unit offline a few months ago and ::coughs;: forgot to install the wake on command power supply, so it is setting there... not booting...Please PM me about it, but we have some software that, for ES integration purposes, is 75% complete, and was already built partially with ES' needs in mind. I'll at least give it a look!
Brilliant! And conversely (at least as important), identify the bad and good sellers.What i'd like is a reputation system so people can identify the bad and good buyers.
It would help people make educated choices and make online selling here a lot more useful.
I think this would increase the safety factor
This is how to vote.click 'like' on a post to officially vote on it.
We have a Wiki in the German forum. I've written many articles there, but I think no one reads the Wiki. All typical newbie questions are asked and answered again and again in the forum, no one gives the hint to just read the Wiki....A knowledge base would be great. That gets my vote.
I’ve seen the other wiki regarding the open firmware for KT controllers, but not that one. Thank you for sharing.We have a Wiki in the German forum. I've written many articles there, but I think no one reads the Wiki. All typical newbie questions are asked and answered again and again in the forum, no one gives the hint to just read the Wiki....
regards
stancecoke
We have a Wiki in the German forum. I've written many articles there, but I think no one reads the Wiki. All typical newbie questions are asked and answered again and again in the forum, no one gives the hint to just read the Wiki....
regards
stancecoke
Feature | Nerdpress | Other KB systems |
Interface isn't basically a copy of wikimedia | v/ And easily customizable to look like an extension of xenforo | x wiki.js was the only modern looking system, but hard to customize |
WYSIWYG editing interface | v/ Extremely similar to MS Word | x Contributors must learn a bespoke markup language - discourages contributions |
Ability to copy/paste images + html from anywhere | v/ Can copy/paste an ES thread, other website, to create a wiki article, including images and formatting | x Absolutely can't do this |
Can work as a single file ( integratable directly into the forum instead of being a different website ) | v/ | x None of these systems built this way |
Article commenting & rating system | v/ Fully featured | x Only partial implementation at best, users' avatars/info not displayed as they are in the forum |
Blog-like view so users can quickly notice new/edited content | v/ System was designed to be a blog originally, has multiple ways to display this | x Non-existent or poor. Usually just an edit log. |
Support for advanced content like mathematic equations, videos, tables, | v/ Provided by WYSIWYG editor | ? Non-complete set or very difficult to use |
Categorization ease of use | v/ Models windows/mac file explorer, users already know how to use it, always on screen, encourages binge reading | x Ranges from totally awful to non-existent in other systems tested. |
Ease / clarity of maintaining categorization | v/ Easiest maintenance of categorization possible | x Massive weak spot in wikis which always leads to poor or non existent organization |
Speed/resource usage | v/ Much faster/smaller than our requirements on ES | ? Massive code size and performance tests indicate they'll create a scaling problem. Previous experience with poor scaling on mediawiki |
Ease of software modification / maintenance | v/ Nerdpress is ~3000 lines of code, 3 files sitting on top of a micro-framework. | x dokuwiki: Approx 6000 files, dependencies add ~1000 files mediawiki: Approx 10000 files, dependencies 2x that |
Easy security & maintenance | v/ Small attack vector, inbuilt DDOS protection, small codebase to audit, great forensics & diag | x Un-auditable due to code size, large attack vector, no system for forensics, previous experience w/having mediawiki compromised & requiring constant updates |
The only relevant question to ask is ....'why does no one read the wiki?'We have a Wiki in the German forum. I've written many articles there, but I think no one reads the Wiki. All typical newbie questions are asked and answered again and again in the forum, no one gives the hint to just read the Wiki....
regards
stancecoke
It's interesting that these criteria are all for the contributors. Nothing for the users?We had the same case with our old wiki, but the format was worse and information quality lower than what people would find on the forum because we didn't vet contributors. Navigation was much worse because we were using the mediawiki engine.
I think producing a much better KB system would increase utilization. My experience with using nerdpress as a documentation engine for businesses, is that 80% of people who give it a try, continue to use it, and a majority of people who use it also contribute information. This was a lot better than previous solutions where usually one person was doing all the maintenance and people weren't reading it.
We think it could do good on ES.
Here's a feature comparison i put together years ago. The features on the left were what i considered minimum features for a wiki system.
Feature Nerdpress Other KB systems Interface isn't basically a copy of wikimedia v/
And easily customizable to look like an extension of xenforox
wiki.js was the only modern looking system, but hard to customizeWYSIWYG editing interface v/
Extremely similar to MS Wordx
Contributors must learn a bespoke markup language - discourages contributionsAbility to copy/paste images + html from anywhere v/
Can copy/paste an ES thread, other website, to create a wiki article, including images and formattingx
Absolutely can't do thisCan work as a single file ( integratable directly into the forum instead of being a different website ) v/ x
None of these systems built this wayArticle commenting & rating system v/
Fully featuredx
Only partial implementation at best, users' avatars/info not displayed as they are in the forumBlog-like view so users can quickly notice new/edited content v/
System was designed to be a blog originally, has multiple ways to display thisx
Non-existent or poor. Usually just an edit log.Support for advanced content like mathematic equations, videos, tables, v/
Provided by WYSIWYG editor?
Non-complete set or very difficult to useCategorization ease of use v/
Models windows/mac file explorer, users already know how to use it, always on screen, encourages binge readingx
Ranges from totally awful to non-existent in other systems tested.Ease / clarity of maintaining categorization v/
Easiest maintenance of categorization possiblex
Massive weak spot in wikis which always leads to poor or non existent organizationSpeed/resource usage v/
Much faster/smaller than our requirements on ES?
Massive code size and performance tests indicate they'll create a scaling problem. Previous experience with poor scaling on mediawikiEase of software modification / maintenance v/
Nerdpress is ~3000 lines of code, 3 files sitting on top of a micro-framework.x
dokuwiki: Approx 6000 files, dependencies add ~1000 files
mediawiki: Approx 10000 files, dependencies 2x thatEasy security & maintenance v/
Small attack vector, inbuilt DDOS protection, small codebase to audit, great forensics & diagx
Un-auditable due to code size, large attack vector, no system for forensics,
previous experience w/having mediawiki compromised & requiring constant updates
PS - Nerdpress will eventually be open sourced; any forum would be welcome to use it to replace their existing engine.
The only relevant question to ask is ....'why does no one read the wiki?'
My personal experience is that they are often hard to find, and not user friendly. I cannot think of a single wiki across several hobbies that I reference .....
It's interesting that these criteria are all for the contributors. Nothing for the users?